Macro: Housing Starts And Permits
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Housing starts and permits for April are running at a level of approximately 1.4 million units, down from around 1.8 million last year. That’s a drop of 22% in starts and 21% in permits. 1.4 million units is roughly in line with the long-term average. This level of starts and permits is not yet concerning, but the slowdown continues to be worrisome.
For housing starts, the surge in building during the pandemic started to abate around April 2022, so the year-ago comps start to get easier. For next month’s release, I would expect the annual growth number to be much better than -22%. A wide forecast would be for -7% to -13%.
Should annual growth in housing starts fall again by 20% May 2022 to May 2023, that would put us around 1.2 million units, which has been a recessionary level in prior cycles. So the sequential number for May will be the one to watch next month.
As for permits, the data diverges a bit starting in May 2022. Permitting continued to run at a higher rate through August 2022. This is likely because of delays or backlogs in the permit process from the pandemic restrictions. We’ll just call it building permit supply chain disruptions.
The annual drop in permits is expected to remain higher than starts. The annual growth rate shouldn’t be less than -20%, but somewhere around -16% to -18% is in the ballpark.
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